A collection of articles discussing the philosophy and practice of the spiritual teachings of Bhagavan Sri Ramana, written by Michael James and forming an extension of his main website, www.happinessofbeing.com.

Friday, 18 April 2014

A friend recently wrote to me saying that he felt that in my article Does the practice of ātma-vicāra work? I did not really answer the question in a direct manner, and he tried to explain why he felt this. The gist of what he wrote was as follows: after many years of practising self-attention, he had arrived at a firm conviction that there is only one self, not one self in search of another self, and that ‘I am the Self’; there is only the Self, so the striving, the searching and the attaining of the Self is only an illusion created by the mind, and Ramana said that the mind doesn’t exist; therefore he is firmly convinced that ‘I am the Self’ and that he only has to abide in the Self; although the illusion of the world is still there, with the mind and thoughts, it doesn’t change the fact that there is only the Self; whether or not the mind is destroyed now, it doesn’t really matter, because it is only an image on the screen and has no reality; so is ‘realisation’ necessary? Won’t jñāna [self-knowledge] occur when the body dies? Therefore he concluded that until the body and mind are destroyed by death, what is important is to have the conviction that ‘There is only the Self and nothing else’, and that ‘I am That’.

In some subsequent emails he also asked about ‘progress’ (with reference to an example that Bhagavan gave of detonating a canon: preparing it for detonation takes time, but once prepared, it is detonated in an instant) and about fear that arises during the practice of ātma-vicāra, and also asked whether certain experiences could be explained in terms of kuṇḍalinī. The following is adapted and compiled from the replies I wrote to him:

Yes, there is only self, and self is what we always experience as ‘I am’. However, so long as we experience ourself as a person (an entity consisting of body and mind), we experience not only ‘I’ but also many other things, and this creates the illusion that ‘I’ is something limited: one thing among many other things.
We experience other things because we experience ourself as a body, and we experience ourself as a body because we do not clearly experience ourself as we really are. Therefore, in order to destroy the illusion of otherness, we must experience what we actually are.

The death of our body will not enable us to experience ourself as we really are, because this body is no more real than any body that we experience as ‘I’ in a dream. When we leave a dream body by waking up or subsiding into sleep, we do not thereby experience what we really are. Why then should we suppose that when we leave this body due to death we will thereby experience what we really are? We leave this body every night when we fall asleep, but we do not thereby experience what we really are.

Moreover, we will never actually experience our own death, because as soon as we leave this body, we either fall asleep or begin to experience another dream. What appears to be death in the view of others will be just like the ending of a dream for the person who dies. Therefore the death of our body is not a solution to our present problem of self-ignorance.

Nor is the thought ‘I am the self’, because like all other thoughts it comes and goes. Since we do not think ‘I am the self’ in sleep, or even throughout our waking and dream states, it is alien to us: that is, it is something other than what we really are.

That which thinks ‘I am the self’ is only the mind, because self itself need not and cannot think ‘I am the self’. Our real self — that is, what we really are — is completely devoid of thought, and also of any experience of anything other than ‘I am’. It just is, and does not experience anything other than its own ‘is’-ness or being: ‘I am’.

As Bhagavan Ramana repeatedly emphasised, the only means by which we can experience ourself as we really are is self-investigation (ātma-vicāra): that is, investigating what this ‘I’ actually is by trying to focus our entire attention upon it to the complete exclusion of all else. That is, we cannot experience what this ‘I’ actually is by attending to anything other than it — not even by attending to a thought such as ‘I am the self’. As Sri Ramana says in verse 27 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu:

English translation: The state in which ‘I’ exists without rising is the state in which we exist as that [self or brahman]. Without investigating the source from which ‘I’ rises, how to attain the annihilation of oneself, where ‘I’ does not rise? [And] without attaining [this ego-annihilation], say, how to abide in the state of self, in which one is that?

The source from which ‘I’ rises is only ourself — what we really are — so investigating the source from which ‘I’ rises means investigating what we actually are. Unless we investigate this, how can we experience what we actually are?

Therefore investigation or vicāra is essential, and if we believe what Ramana has taught us, it does work. However, merely believing his words is not going to solve our problems, because we can actually experience what we are (and thereby know from our own experience that vicāra does work) only by investigating ourself.

Vicāra is the effort that we make to experience only ‘I’, and when we succeed in this effort we will discover that we always experience only ‘I’. Therefore what is an illusion is not experiencing only ‘I’, but is only the effort that we make to experience it. This effort is necessary so long as we experience anything other than ‘I’, but eventually we will find that we never actually experienced anything other than ‘I’, so our present experience of other things is an illusion, as also is our effort to experience only ‘I’. Just as we can use one thorn to remove another thorn from our foot, we must use the illusion of making this effort to remove the illusion of experiencing other things.

Therefore, though it will all eventually turn out to be an illusion, so long as we are experiencing this illusion we must make effort to experience only ‘I’. As Sri Ramana says in the first two sentences of the eleventh paragraph of Nāṉ Yār? (Who am I?):

As long as viṣaya-vāsanās exist in the mind, so long the investigation who am I is necessary. As and when thoughts arise, then and there it is necessary to annihilate them all by vicāraṇā [investigation or vigilant self-attentiveness] in the very place from which they arise. […]

Viṣaya-vāsanās are the desires or liking that we have to experience viṣayas: anything other than ‘I’. Only so long as such desires exist do we experience the appearance of anything other than ‘I’, and according to Sri Ramana such things seem to exist only because we like to experience them. That is, as in a dream, everything that we experience other than ‘I’ is a creation of our mind, or more precisely, of the viṣaya-vāsanās that constitute it. The mind seems to exist only because of its vāsanās: its inclinations or desires to experience anything other than ‘I’.

Therefore to destroy the illusion that we are this mind, we must gradually weaken and eventually destroy its viṣaya-vāsanās. And the only way to weaken and destroy its viṣaya-vāsanās is to cultivate the opposite liking: the liking to experience only ‘I’. As should be obvious, the only way to cultivate this liking is to practise trying to experience only ‘I’, because if we do not persistently try to experience only ‘I’, we cannot expect any liking to experience it to arise in us of its own accord.

We now have a liking to experience things other than ‘I’ because of a wrong choice that we made in the past, and that we have continued making ever since. Therefore it is up to us now to choose whether we want to continue allowing ourself to be dominated by this liking, or whether we now want to choose the opposite: to experience only ‘I’. If this is what we now choose, we must work hard at trying to replace our age-old liking to experience other things with our new liking to experience only ‘I’.

The practice of trying to experience only ‘I’ is what Sri Ramana calls ātma-vicāra or self-investigation, and this practice will continue to be necessary until not even the slightest liking to experience anything else remains undestroyed. Therefore in the tenth paragraph of Nāṉ Yār? he says:

Even though viṣaya-vāsanās, which come from time immemorial, rise [as thoughts] in countless numbers like ocean-waves, they will all be destroyed when svarūpa-dhyāna [self-attentiveness] increases and increases. Without giving room even to the doubting thought ‘Is it possible to dissolve so many vāsanās and be only as self?’ it is necessary to cling tenaciously to self-attentiveness. […]

Therefore it is necessary for us to continue practising ātma-vicāra or self-attentiveness — trying to experience nothing other than ‘I’ alone — so long as we experience any thought or anything other than ‘I’. We cannot reasonably expect self-knowledge (ātma-jñāna) to occur when the body dies or at any other time if we do not persist in trying to experience what we really are by practising ātma-vicāra: that is, by trying to cling tenaciously to self-attentiveness to the exclusion of all else.

Regarding progress, if we are trying to experience what this ‘I’ actually is, we will certainly be making progress, but we should not expect to see any obvious signs of progress. Sri Ramana used to say that perseverance is the only true sign of progress. After years of practice we may still feel that we can see no sign of any increased capacity to cling firmly to self-attentiveness, but so long as we keep on trying, we can be sure that we are progressing.

The example of preparing a canon for detonation is very apt. It takes time to prepare it, but when ready it will detonate in an instant. Practising vicāra is like patiently preparing the canon: eventually it will lead to perfect clarity of self-awareness, which will immediately destroy the mind forever, and this is like the instantaneous detonation of the carefully prepared canon.

As we get closer to that point of detonation, it is natural that fear may arise, because our mind is desperate to survive: to cling on to the illusion that it actually exists.

Regarding kuṇḍalinī, it is sometimes said that all that is described about the kuṇḍalinī in yōga śāstras is effected automatically and without our awareness when we practice vicāra. But such explanations are useful or interesting only for those whose minds still attach importance to such phenomena. For those of us who just want to know what this ‘I’ actually is, such explanations are of very little interest.

Sadhu Om used to explain that what is called kuṇḍalinī is nothing other than the consciousness ‘I’ spreading throughout the body. When we attend only to ‘I’, it begins to withdraw from the body, and this withdrawal is what is described as the rising of the kuṇḍalinī. However, in order to experience what this ‘I’ really is, we do not need to know anything about the kuṇḍalinī or its rising.

Ultimately the body, its nādis (the subtle nerves or channels through which the life-force is said to travel throughout the body and the kuṇḍalinī is said to rise up to the head) and the kuṇḍalinī are all just concepts, ideas or beliefs, and our aim should be to ignore all concepts and ideas in order to focus our entire attention only on ‘I’.

The experiences you describe could be explained in terms of kuṇḍalinī, but how useful would such an explanation be? At most it would satisfy the mind’s curiosity: its natural liking to find a satisfying explanation for everything.

But you are right to take no interest in that (either in the experiences or in any explanation for them), because such experiences are something other than ‘I’, so if we take interest in them they will distract our attention away from ‘I’. Whenever such an experience occurs, what we should be interested in is only trying to investigate the ‘I’ to whom they occur: to whom? to me; who am I?

Whatever can be described in words is not ‘I’ (and hence not real), because what we can describe is only features, whereas ‘I’ is that which is devoid of all features (and is therefore ineffable).

4 comments:

Anna Malai
said...

Michael,

As always the article is very important and precious, but this time I have doubts concerning what you have written about the fear. The friend asked you about the fear that arises during the practice of ātma-vicāra, you answered: “As we get closer to that point of detonation, it is natural that fear may arise, because our mind is desperate to survive: to cling on to the illusion that it actually exists”

Is it really so? If ātma-vicāra is focusing our entire attention on the self, is there a place for a fear when attention is entirely within, on the self? Fear is a thought – is there a place for thoughts in ātma-vicāra, and can we still call it ātma-vicāra or loka-vicāra? Fear comes from identification with the body(s), in ātma-vicāra such identification ceases, haw can the fear come into being?

My experience is just the opposite: as long as the attention is entirely focused on the self, which is ātma-vicāra I believe, there is no fear. Fear appears when the attention on the self is lost, thinking process starts and the attention is back on an external object (like thoughts).

The more ātma-vicāra I practice, the weaker the fear is, even in the state in which mind is active in his thinking. Seems the identification with the body(s) becomes weaker too, so there is much less of the fear. Or we can say the mind becomes more sattvic. And the opposite: the less practice, the more often the fear comes and the more intense it is.

Anna Malai, yes, if we are able to attend exclusively to ourself, our ego will subside and dissolve forever in its source, and hence there will be no one to whom any fear could occur. However, until we manage to attend exclusively to ourself (that is, until we experience ‘I’ alone, in complete isolation from everything else), our ego will still exist, and hence it will be liable to experience desire, fear or any other such thought or mental phenomenon.

So long as our ego survives, we have not yet managed to attend exclusively to ‘I’, so our self-investigation (ātma-vicāra) is not yet complete. When practising ātma-vicāra, we are trying to experience ourself alone, in complete isolation from all thoughts or other experiences, and if we manage to experience ourself thus for just a moment, we will thereby experience ourself as we really are, and thus the illusion that we are this ego will be destroyed forever. Therefore if our ego (and all that it experiences) still seems to exist, we have not yet managed to isolate ourself completely from all thoughts (that is, from all experiences or awareness of anything other than ‘I’).

When you write, ‘Fear is a thought – is there a place for thoughts in ātma-vicāra, and can we still call it ātma-vicāra or loka-vicāra? Fear comes from identification with the body(s), in ātma-vicāra such identification ceases, how can the fear come into being?’, you seem to be confusing the practice of ātma-vicāra with the goal of ātma-vicāra. The goal of ātma-vicāra is to experience ‘I’ alone, but so long as we are still practising ātma-vicāra we have not yet reached that goal, and hence in our practice of ātma-vicāra our pure self-awareness is still mixed to a greater or lesser extent with thoughts (that is, with awareness of something other than ‘I’), no matter how subtle those thoughts may be.

When you say that in your experience ‘as long as the attention is entirely focused on the self, which is ātma-vicāra I believe, there is no fear’ and that ‘Fear appears when the attention on the self is lost’, it is clear that your self-attentiveness is still impermanent and hence unstable, which means that you have not yet managed to isolate ‘I’ (yourself) completely from all thoughts. If you once manage to isolate yourself completely, you would experience yourself as you really are, your ego would thereby be destroyed, and thus you would never again experience any loss of self-attentiveness, because you would have experienced self-attentiveness (pure self-awareness) as your real nature.

However advanced our practice may be, so long as our ego survives we are not immune to fear. Even in the case of Bhagavan Ramana (or Venkataraman, as he was then), the last thing his ego experienced was an intense fear of death, and it was that intense fear that drove him to turn his attention within to investigate whether ‘I’ is something that would die with the death of the body. Thus he experienced ‘I’ as it really is, and hence his ego was destroyed and fear was vanquished forever. Therefore, we should not imagine that we have vanquished fear by our practice of ātma-vicāra, because so long as there is an ‘I’ (an ego) to think that, it has not yet reached the safe harbour of complete egolessness, which is the goal of ātma-vicāra.

Michael,in the middle of the article the paragraph beginning with "Therefore to destroy the illusion that we are this mind, we must...gradually weaken and eventually destroy its visaya-vasanas.in the first line there is a repetition of the word "must". Regarding the meaning of the sentence the second "must" seems unnecessary and pointless. Maybe it is a slip.

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